Sympathetic Overactivity and 24-Hour Blood Pressure Pattern in Hypertensives with Chronic Renal Failure
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Renal Failure
- Vol. 17 (6) , 751-758
- https://doi.org/10.3109/08860229509037643
Abstract
In order to assess the activity of the sympathetic system and to evaluate the 24-h blood pressure pattern in hypertensives with chronic renal failure (CRF), 12 CRF patients and 16 essential hypertensives (EHs) were studied. In all subjects, plasma samples for catecholamines and renin activity were obtained both in the basal condition and after standing, and 24-h blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) was performed. The 24-h mean blood pressure results were quite similar between CRFs and EHs. In 50% of the CRFs, ABPM showed a nighttime decrease in diastolic BP (DBP) greater than 10%, while in the remaining 50% the ABPM indicated a nondipper blood pressure pattern. Of the 16 EHs, 4 had a nighttime decrease in DBP < 10%, that is, nondippers. The study of circulating catecholamines showed no significant differences in plasma epinephrine between CRFs and EHs, while plasma norepinephrine (NE) was significantly higher in hypertensives with CRF than in EHs, both at rest and after standing (p < 0.05 and 0.02, respectively). Among dipper hypertensives, subjects with CRF showed greater values of basal plasma NE than EHs (535 +/- 67 vs. 412 +/- 24.5 pg/mL, p < 0.05); the comparison between dipper and nondipper CRFs showed no differences in circulating NE levels (535 vs. 516 pg/mL). The present study shows that CRFs are characterized by higher values of plasma NE than EHs, and that there are no differences in sympathetic activity between dipper and nondipper hypertensives with CRF.Keywords
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